maxblast72
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2006
- Posts
- 931
We didn't sell airplanes this year for proftitablity, we sold airplanes to increase liquidity/preserve cash. Fornaro has stated the plan is to return to profitability (10 analysts predicting an average of $0.60 EPS for 2009), increase our cash reserve to $600-800 million, and then resume growth in 2011 with our 55 737 delivery spots we have between 2011 and 2016.AirTran's business model over the last 7 years has been to take advantage of others misfortune i.e. Metrojet, US Airways, Independance Air, and ATA. Now that there are no east coast carriers in bankruptcy and the playing field is about even, what will be their plan? That is what wallstreet wants to see and me as well. I don't think you can sell airplanes to profitablity. What is the strategic long term objective? In this current environment, beware if your CEO can't state one!
If something drastic happens in the domestic capacity situation and we thought there was a good opportunity to be had, we can get our hands on 717s pretty cheaply. Boeing already has the option to lease 5 old Midwest 717s in 2009 if they can't find another home for them.
Airtran has the lowest non-fuel CASM in the industry. As fuel prices drop, Airtran's non-fuel CASM advantage becomes a bigger deal as non-fuel CASM becomes a bigger percentage of total CASM. Lower cost airlines have more flexibility and usually do better during economic downturns. I wouldn't stick the fork in Airtran just yet.
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